The Crow: The Third Book of Pellinor
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Average customer review:Product Description
Whilst his sister, Maerad, pursues her dangerous destiny in the frozen North, Hem is sent south to Turbansk for his own safety. But soon the forces of the Dark overrun the great city and Hem flees with his mentor Saliman, his white crow Irc, and a young orphan girl Zelika, to join the resistance. He agrees to help fight the Nameless One by spying on the child armies of the Dark. But, in the Light's underground base, Hem has a vision - he too has a part to play in Maerad's quest for the Treesong...
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #8426 in Books
- Published on: 2006-07-03
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 512 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"* "This is a tale with passionate, inspiring characters, an enchanting protagonist and vividly described landscapes... a great series of fantasy novels that will delight fans of Garth Nix and G. P. Taylor." The Bookseller * "What makes this different is the length given to detailed description... which leaves you with the most thorough of backgrounds." Books For Keeps"
Croggon backtracks along her time line to chronicle Hem's grueling and poignant struggles during The Riddle (2006). Hem's in Turbansk, lonely and belligerent, resisting his Bard schooling. The poisonous Dark threatens the Suderain, and the Black Army marches on Turbansk. As battle begins and the city is besieged, Saliman allows Hem to stay rather than fleeing with the other children. Hem's healing powers emerge, and readers see that he, too, has a predestined role in saving Edil-Amarandh - fully as cryptic as Maerad's role. Escaping the city, living in caves and training in spy techniques all help Hem when he secretly joins a rank of child-slave warriors. By the end, Hem is scarred and saddened forever, but an Elidhu has given him luminous new knowledge in the form of music that may help Maerad complete the Treesong. Saliman's love sustains Hem through these oppressively grim times. This serious penultimate epic, filled with Tolkien-like images, is emotionally astute and brimming with vivid detail. (map, pronunciation key, appendices) (Fantasy. YA) (Kirkus Reviews)
About the Author
Alison Croggon is an award-winning poet whose work has been published extensively in anthologies and magazines internationally. She has written widely for theatre, and her plays and opera libretti have been produced all around Australia. Alison is also an editor and a critic and she lives in Melbourne with her husband Daniel Keene, the playwright, and their three children.
Customer Reviews
"Songboy, at last out of the foretimes you come. I have waited for thee long."
Vivid imagery, beautifully described landscapes and a powerful story line; Croggon's third instalment in the Pellinor series is a tale of heightened emotions and great human endurance in the face of an ever growing threat from both "the evil within", and the armies of the Nameless.
"In the darkness the Light shines more brightly", here indeed is a tale riddled with great darkness and loss and fear. We follow Hem, brother of The Fated One, Elednor- The Fire Lilly of Edil-Amarandth, prophesied to bring about the downfall of the Nameless One in his darkest rising, on his journey South to the ancient and extravagant city of Turbansk with his mentor Saliman.
Hem in the opening chapters of the book appears as a troubled adolescent, questioning who he is, what he wants from life and where he belongs. This contemplating of his existence, doesn't last long however as Turbansk comes under the threat of the Black Army and Hem finds more pressing matters of concern outside his bubble. He is forced to strengthen and toughen his will as he looks after the victims of war from neighbouring regions. Through this work and a quite contemplation of the horror's that have afflicted him throughout his young life, Hem comes to realise that he too must contribute to this crusade between Light and Dark. Together with the fiery Zelika, Hem spies on the horrifying child armies of the Nameless that break the will of the men fighting against them through their savage ruthlessness and brutality, and enters he the capital of the Dark: Den Raven itself.
I admit that on first picking up this novel I found it hard to get into- I was too drawn into the world of Maerad to care much for the seemingly petty problems of her "baby brother" (as the novel progress', this thought is eradicated and I thoroughly enjoy the novel). This is one of the reasons the novel receives four stars rather than the five that I otherwise would have awarded. The other reason for this is the mere fact that I found its predecessor, "The Riddle", a more action packed read and so had to place it a rank lower in brilliance.
Croggon writes like a master story teller, slowly building tension and atmosphere as the terrifying nature of a war that threatens to destroy all that is sacred and beautiful in the worlds of her characters. Some of the best passages in the novel are during the time in which Turbansk is besieged by the black army. Here Croggon's writing is full of emotion and vivid description. The air within the city is vibrating with expectation and the sound of the Black Armies braying trumpets, "This lent life a new, vivid urgency" writes Croggon, and Turbansk's beauty seems to "glow with a poignant intensity" in this new climate of fear.
This is a series inspired- as are many others- by the works of Tolkien, the father of modern fantasy. However, Croggon has an originality that many of her contemporaries lack: her novels- and the Crow especially, draw on powerful parallels between the world of the Balance and the Bards and our own. The struggle's and wars that rage in the novel are much like the one's that tear the breast of the earth today; however politics aside, Croggon paints a picture of the ugly demon that is war and its tragedies. Through characters in the novel we see what war can do to ordinary man and child and the strength and resolve with which war's survivors must live in order to carry on their lives in its aftermath.
The Crow is a novel about people and relationships and the great catastrophe of war that even today threatens all that is fair and beautiful in our world. There is a wisdom in the novel that refers can benefit us all if only we cared to take it on board and learn from it: "It may be a question of whether to use the weapons of the Dark in order to worse the Dark...but how can we say that we fight for the Light, if we show ourselves no better than the dark?"
Surprised?
When I first read this book I was surprised at how abrupt (and complete) the shift from Maered (the heroine of the first two books) to Hem was. After being drawn completely into Maered's story, the shift in focus actually made me initially dislike this book. I've read it through many times since then, and although it still irks that I have to wait to find out what happened to Maered, this is still an amazing story!
While his sister searches for the Treesong in distant lands (which we read about in "The Gift" and "The Riddle"), Hem is slowly and reluctantly forced into a war where even children must fight one another to keep their freedom.
Croggan has created a world where music, magic and love are all as important as one another. She doesn't depend on elaborate magical powers, or open warfare, to make her stories exciting- although a good dose of both of them makes these as appealing to fantasy devotees as ever. Instead, the stories are carried by the very real people who live in the pages- people who aren't smarter, or more canny, or more beautiful than the next, but who face their problems in ways that we can relate to.
The whole series so far is very well written and entertaining.
Haunting and harrowing
Another stunning novel from Alison Croggan in the Pellinor series. This one may be more accessible to younger male readers, since it relates Hem's story so takes a more masculine perspective. Parts of it are quite harrowing, such as the child soldiers, and certain character deaths. It has the same epic, sweeping sense of darkness as Tolkien and other leading fantasy writers.
I would like to recommend to those who have already read The Gift and The Riddle that they re-read them after The Crow. I hadn't realised how carefully structured and planned this series is, and reading them a second time was not only a delight but also illuminating in terms of plot and character. They are amazingly re-readable and are greatly enhanced by The Crow, partly because it is contemporaneous to The Riddle.
Also there are sample chapters from the as yet unpublished fourth book, The Singing, on Alison Croggan's site, as well as sample chapters from the first three novels. They will give potential readers a proper taste of what the series is like, so you really can try before you buy. The only sad thing is that it seems as though the fourth book may be the last; I had hoped it would be a pentology.




